• Neuromancer
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    241 year ago

    The part I find insane is 16 times. Let’s pretend he needed to be shot. The law says to stop a threat. It’s not to kill someone. 16 shots to me is excessive.

    2-3 rounds will subdue the average person.

    I’m not trying to quarterback here but damn, it just seems the amount of force is excessive.

    • chaogomu
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      181 year ago

      US cops are actually trained to empty their clips once they open fire. It’s fucking disgusting.

      It’s as if they actively panic themselves every time they open fire. It should be grounds for a murder investigation every time they fire more than once without pausing and assessing.

      Or just an external investigation every single time they open fire.

    • @LowtierComputer
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      161 year ago

      Not arguing with you, but police training is to continue shooting until the threat is eliminated. That means on the ground, not moving, Hand off of weapon.

      The US military uses pretty much the same logic.

      The difference obviously being the US military shoots non-threats less often.

      If you consider a perspective of someone fending off a knife-wielding attacker, it is better to shoot until they’re “eliminated”. Of course the US police are also trained to be scared and trigger happy.

      • chaogomu
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        131 year ago

        The difference is, in the US military you are not allowed to use deadly force without either prior authorization, or at times a direct order from a superior.

        That superior must then answer for that use of force, and if they fail, they get in trouble up to and including murder charges.